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Posts Tagged ‘co-op’

IS SHEIK NOT CHIC?

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Posted by Leonard Steinberg on May 9th, 2012

Sheik Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani — prime minister of the oil-rich Persian Gulf nation of Qatar — was rejected in his $31.5 million attempts to buy a pair of 907 Fifth Avenue apartments once owned by the recently deceased eccentric heiress Huguette Clark. Although boards have no obligation to reveal the reasons for their decision, rumor has it that the building shuddered at the thought of the Sheik’s diplomatic immunity, the many children he planned on housing there, not to mention the costly and time-consuming mammoth combination renovation required. The Sheik should not feel badly: board rejections are something all are used to in the crazy New York real estate market…..it has happened to even the whitest wasps!

Do buildings of this ilk prefer creepy doll collections over kid collections? Does Copper trump oil? Maybe Sheik is simply not chic enough for Fifth Avenue……

CO-OPS: NEW TIMES, NEW RULES

Sunday, May 8th, 2011

Posted by Leonard Steinberg on May 8, 2011

We live in new times, which requires adjusting. All of us are doing it. Some Democrats are talking about deficits, some Republicans are talking about energy savings and green energy. Condominiums are talking about reserve funds and closer scrutiny of buyers. Yet many co-ops appear to be stuck in a time warp, and very clearly impact the value of the real estate they own.

I was chatting to a broker the other day about a co-op apartment she is trying to sell on the Upper East Side. It is a large one bedroom, over 1,000sf in size in a doorman building. It is asking a little over $ 650/sf. It is not in the most desirable location, but certainly a good one, moments from a Park. Maybe its time for buildings like this one to re-evaluate its co-op policies. Maybe co-ops that are under-valued could take on new life by adopting new rules such as a more liberal sub-leasing policy, installing a slick gym in the basement, updating the lobby, not just through a design comittee of owners, but through a serious comparison to other buildings that are valued at more than double. I often see apartments in these tired co-ops and marvel at the scale of the rooms, although ceiling heights in some are horrible. I wonder why a co-op would think that  AC window-units were either economical or esthetically pleasing to anyone anymore: they are neither.

Another good idea would be to specify more clearly what board requirements these co-ops have, and maybe align them more with the real world.

Condo’s have adopted many ‘co-op-style’ rules to improve the quality of life in their buildings.

Yes, it is true the co-op structure has kept the New York market very stable and that should continue, but maybe the time has come to re-invent the co-op, keeping all that is good and eliminating all the bad, counter-productive stuff that hurts the prospects of future owners, but worse, de-values the homes of many un-necessarily.

It is time for all of us, condo’s and co-ops, Democrats and Republicans, parents and kids, husbands and wives, corporations and employees, unions and governments, to stike a fair balance and meet in the middle…..do whats best, not focusing exclusively on what is purely self-serving and counter productive to the big picture.

3.5% Downpayment insanity?

Friday, August 13th, 2010

The FHA has come out to guarantee mortgage loans on a few new buildings in Manhattan:  While the idea is brilliant, and long overdue, the plan is a perfect example of how governments can take a great idea and muck it up really badly. As we exit (very slowly and grindingly and uncerytainly) from the worst recession since the Great Depression, the FHA wants to offer guarantees on loans involving up to 96.5% financing! Did we learn ABSOLUTELY NOTHING from the mistakes of the past few years?

“This stupidity makes me want to take to the streets and yell at the top of my lungs!” says Leonard Steinberg, leader of the LUXURYLOFT team specialized in luxury Downtown Manhattan/New York real estate. “One of New York’s saving graces in this recession was that New York hardly accepted financing with less than 10% down: co-ops required a minimum of 20% down, unlike the rest of the country. Yes, help 50% or less sold buildings obtain financing, but don’t provide it to unqualified buyers and don’t minimize the commitment to the point where walking away is a no-brainer.”

Whitney Gollinger, marketing chief for a Manhattan condo building with an outdoor movie theater and panoramic city views, is highlighting a different amenity to spur sales: the financial backing of the federal government.

The Federal Housing Administration agreed in March to insure mortgages for apartments at the 98-unit Gramercy Park development, known as Tempo. That enables buyers to make a down payment of as little as 3.5 percent in a building where apartments range from $820,000 to $3 million.

“It’s a government seal of approval,” said Gollinger, a director at the Developments Group of New York-based brokerage Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate. “We need as many sales tools as we can have these days, and it’s one more tool.”

The FHA, created in 1934 to make homeownership attainable for low- to moderate-income Americans, is providing a lifeline to new Manhattan luxury condominiums after sales stalled. Buildings featuring pet spas, concierges and rooftop lounges are applying for agency backing to unlock bank financing for purchasers. The FHA guarantees that if a homebuyer defaults on his mortgage, the agency will pay it.

At least nine Manhattan condo developments south of 96th Street have sought approval for FHA backing since the agency loosened its financing rules in December, according to a database of applications kept by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The change allows the FHA to insure loans in new projects where only 30 percent of units are in contract, down from at least 50 percent. About 1,900 apartments in New York’s most expensive neighborhoods would be covered by the applications.

Filling a Void

The agency also offers insurance to half of all mortgages in a single building after previously setting a limit at 30 percent, according to the new standards, which expire in December. The entire property must be approved for a buyer to get backing. Most of those that applied in Manhattan are buildings converted to condos or built since 2007.

The FHA is filling a void left after mortgage-finance agency Fannie Mae tightened its condo lending standards last year. The Washington-based company won’t back loans made in new buildings where fewer than 51 percent of the units are in contract, sometimes setting a requirement as high as 70 percent.

That in turn makes mortgage lenders hesitant to make loans at developments under those thresholds, said Orest Tomaselli, chief executive officer of White Plains, New York-based National Condo Advisors LLC, which advises condominiums on how to adhere to Fannie Mae and FHA standards.

‘Not an Accident’

“It’s not an accident that the FHA is offering this — not private lenders,” said Christopher Mayer, senior vice dean at Columbia Business School’s Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate in New York. “An unfilled condominium complex is not the kind of thing that a bank looking to rebuild its balance sheet on real estate is looking to do.”

In New York City, the priciest urban U.S. housing market, the FHA insures loans of as much as $729,750, and permits buyers to borrow up to 96.5 percent of the price.

No buildings in Manhattan applied for FHA recognition between 1998 and 2008 — though in those years the program didn’t require an entire property be approved and condo buyers could seek FHA-insured loans on their own, Tomaselli said.

New development in Manhattan represented 23 percent of the sales market in the second quarter, compared with 35 percent two years earlier, according to New York appraiser Miller Samuel Inc. About 8,700 new apartments in the borough were empty as of June, partly because of a lack of available financing for buyers, said Jonathan Miller, president of the firm.

‘Ironic’ Move

“Something has to happen for this product to be marketable,” Miller said. “I just find the whole thing ironic that FHA is providing financing for luxury housing.”

The FHA loosened the condo rules because of “market conditions,” according to Lemar Wooley, an agency spokesman.

“We are certainly cognizant of falling sales prices, limited availability of liquidity, etc., so we wanted to be flexible,” Wooley wrote in an e-mail. “The risk was considered before issuance of the temporary guidance.”

The new rules are a “game changer,” said Ryan Serhant, vice president at Nest Seekers International, a brokerage with offices in New York and Florida. He’s marketing 99 John Deco Lofts, a 442-unit conversion project in downtown Manhattan that features a “zen” flower garden and Brooklyn Bridge views.

The development, where sales began more than two years ago, had 10 units go into contract with FHA backing since approval in March. The FHA suspended its support for the building Aug. 3, according to the agency website. The property is working to have it reinstated, Serhant said.

Eager for Approval

Angela Ferrara, who markets the Sheffield condos on West 57th Street, checks every day whether the 597-unit property, which applied to the FHA in May, has won approval. Ferrara, vice president of sales for New York-based the Marketing Directors Inc., says she is eager to start touting the FHA backing to potential buyers. That’s a reversal from the past, when government loan programs weren’t necessary — or advertised.

“People would get the wrong idea, and think it was a different type of government-subsidized product,” Ferrara said. “It was almost regarded as a negative, particularly in the luxury properties.”

Now, she said, “It’s actually became a widely accepted marketing tool.”

The Sheffield promotes amenities such as concierge service, a pet spa and massage rooms, according to the project’s website. A neighborhood guide on the site lists chef Thomas Keller’s four-star restaurant Per Se as a nearby attraction, along with Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall and Tiffany & Co.’s flagship Fifth Avenue store.

‘Great Solution’

The Sheffield’s owner, New York-based Fortress Investment Group LLC, took over the condo conversion project in foreclosure last August after the original developer, Kent Swig, defaulted on a loan. With 56 percent of the converted units sold or in contract, the building has about 230 units left to sell, Ferrara estimates.

FHA is “definitely is a great solution right now,” said Tomaselli of National Condo Advisors, which prepared the FHA applications for Tempo and Sheffield.

“The savvy developers did it first,” Tomaselli said. “But everybody else is catching up.”

In the borough of Brooklyn, FHA support accounted for half of the 29 units sold at the 111 Monroe condos in Clinton Hill and a quarter of apartments in Williamsburg’s NV building, which is sold out after two years on the market, said David Behin, executive vice president at the Developers Group, a New York brokerage for new buildings.

Limits to Success

The FHA’s effectiveness will be limited in Manhattan because apartment prices are higher than in Brooklyn and the insured loan is capped at $729,750, Behin said. The median price of a Manhattan apartment in a new development was $1.4 million in the second quarter, according to Miller Samuel and Prudential Douglas Elliman.

“With apartments over $1 million, FHA isn’t going to help you,” Behin said. “You’d have to put down 30 percent to get the loan of $729,000. And if you have 30 percent to put down, a bank will loan to you without FHA.”

Borrowers backed by FHA are essentially buying mortgage insurance, said Debra Shultz, managing director at Manhattan Mortgage Company Inc. in New York. Buyers pay an upfront premium of 2.25 percent of their loan value, and a monthly fee equal to about 0.5 percent of the loan amount for at least five years, she said.

Nationwide, the FHA insured 21 percent of all mortgages made in the second quarter, or $71.4 billion worth of loans, according to Geremy Bass, publisher of the Inside FHA Lending newsletter. That’s close to the $79.5 billion total value of all FHA-backed loans in 2007.

Rising Defaults

Nine percent of all FHA-insured loans were 90 days or more past due or in the process of foreclosure in the first quarter, compared with 7.4 percent a year earlier, data from the Washington-based Mortgage Bankers Association show.

The agency doesn’t require a minimum credit score for the mortgage insurance, though many lenders who fund the loans insist on a rating of at least 580, said Shultz.

The FHA is considering a minimum required score of 500, according to a notice the agency filed in the Federal Register on July 15. A person with a 500 rating is in the lowest one percentile of credit scores nationally and was likely delinquent on several accounts in the last year, said John Ulzheimer, president of consumer education for Credit.com, a consumer and credit education company based in San Francisco.

Taking on Risk

“The government is taking on more risk,” said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance. “That’s the bottom line. They really can’t say no, because that’s their purpose. It’s to support the housing market when there’s no other funding.”

Until they heard about FHA, Asha Willis and her boyfriend, Cesar Rivera, didn’t think they would buy a place for at least five years — enough time to save a 20 percent down payment, she said. The couple reasoned that they earned enough to make monthly mortgage payments, and began an apartment search in February, limiting their hunt to buildings with agency backing.

Willis, an attending physician at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn; and Rivera, a sales associate at Chelsea Piers in Manhattan, toured several glass and steel high rises and decided on a one-bedroom at Toll Brothers Inc.’s Two Northside Piers in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. It didn’t have FHA approval at the time, but developers promised it was on its way, Willis said.

Contract Contingency

“Our contract had a contingency that if they weren’t FHA approved we could get out of the contract,” said Willis, currently a renter at Manhattan’s Stuyvesant Town.

Prices at the building range from the “high $300,000s” to more than $2 million, according to Adam Gottlieb, project manager for Northside Piers. The property, which began sales in October 2008, received FHA approval in June.

Shultz, whose Manhattan Mortgage has sourced FHA loans for buyers in Brooklyn, the borough of Queens and on New York’s Long Island, said the last month brought a sudden surge of calls from would-be buyers seeking FHA insurance for Manhattan purchases.

“It’s definitely breaking through to the Manhattan market,” she said.

At Tempo, which is still under construction, developers are hoping that FHA approval will appeal to buyers of lower-priced units and inch the number of contracts signed to the 51 percent that conventional mortgage lenders require, Gollinger said. About 15 percent of the 98 units are under contract.

The developers plan to tout FHA support in e-mails and other promotions in a sales push next month as the building nears completion, Gollinger said.

“I never even dealt with this,” she said. “All of a sudden it became an absolute must.”

HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT? IT’S ABOUT THE REAL ESTATE!

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Unemployment is very high, yet many employers are finding it extremely difficult to fill certain jobs. It is estimated that unemployment amongst the very skilled is actually rather low: We know unemployment amongst the highly educated is definitely low. In this morning’s Wall Street Journal, an article tries to establish what is causing this. Employers and economists point to several explanations. A huge problem goes back to real estate:  Millions of homeowners are unable to move for a job because the real-estate collapse leaves them owing more on their homes than they are worth. The USA has  been a very transient society in recent decades, and re-location for a new job was considered standard practice. With real estate very illiquid, the flexibility to re-locate for a great job with fallen home values diminishes.

“This is another reason why we believe so strongly in owning a condominium, not a co-op,” says Leonard Steinberg, managing director of Prudential Douglas Elliman and publisher of the LUXURYLETTER, a monthly report on luxury Manhattan real estate. “Most co-op’s  severely limit your ability to sub-lease: condominiums will allow much more flexibility. Having the ability to rent out a property till the markets recover allows for much greater flexibility and can potentially result in avoid taking large an un-necessary losses.”

Re-location was a huge part of the real estate brokerage business: to-day, this business has dwindled dramatically.

The job market itself also has changed. During the crisis, companies slashed millions of middle-skill, middle-wage jobs. That has created a glut of people who can’t qualify for highly skilled jobs but have a hard time adjusting to low-pay, unskilled work like the food servers that Pilot Flying J seeks for its truck stops.

The difficulty finding workers limits the economy’s ability to grow. It is particularly troubling at a time when 4.3% of the labor force has been out of work for more than six months—a level much higher than after any other recession since 1948.

Our suggestion: Focus on the real estate!

BIGGEST NEW YORK BIDDING WAR OF 2010

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

The MANHATTAN BIDDING WAR has returned: Carlos Slim, reportedly the wealthiest man in the world, just won a bidding war on the Duke Semans Mansion at 1009 Fifth Avenue in New York City. His winning bid of $44 million outbid a Russian bidder whose bid was around $37 million. This is the largest multiple bid sale of 2010, and an indicator that the high end of the Manhattan luxury real estate market is alive and kicking. “This is an extraordinary sale,” says Leonard Steinberg, managing director of Prudential Douglas Elliman and head of the Luxuryloft team. “Then again, this is a really prized residence so it is not surprising that more than one person wanted to buy it…..especially two buyers who may have had great difficulty buying in the tough co-op’s on Fifth Avenue.” LUXURYLETTER has repeatedly reported on the demand by the super-wealthy for the best of the best, noting that there is actually a shortage of ridiculously expensive real estate in Manhattan.

NEW YORK: THE BEST GLOBAL CITY?

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010
New York  fares well in comparison to other global capitals following the economic downturn of 2008, according to Cities of Opportunity, an annual report on what makes cities thrive, released in a report by the Partnership for New York City and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). The report analyzes how twenty-one global cities perform as centers of business opportunity, according to 58 variables in 10 indicator areas.  New York City holds the top spot in two categories and ranks in the top 6 cities in 8 of the ten categories. New York City and other long-standing world business capitals have weathered a global recession with core economic assets intact but challenges to our pre-eminence are emerging from cities that people find more livable and affordable. Mature cities will need to keep down the costs of living and doing business and improve quality of life to retain top talent and the best jobs in an increasingly competitive world.

#1 in Technology IQ and Innovation, an indicator of a city’s ability to adapt to and take advantage of technological advances in the global economy.  

#3 in Economic Clout, which indicates a city’s ability to influence world markets, attract investment, and stimulate growth. London and Paris take first and second place.

# 1 in the Lifestyle Assets category.  As with Economic Clout, this category favors larger, more mature cities that have well-established entertainment, tourism, fashion and culinary industries. 

# 2 in the Intellectual Capacity category, beat out by Paris, followed by Tokyo, London, Seoul, and Chicago, dependent primarily on a city’s share of top universities and medical schools, as well as its percentage of population with higher education.

# 13 out of the 21 cities surveyed in the Cost category, which the report cites as one of the most basic considerations for business location and expansion decisions, own from #9 (out of 20 cities) in last year’s report. New York City fares particularly poorly in cost of living and cost of business occupancy.  Los Angeles, Toronto and Chicago rank in the top five. 

# 6 in the Sustainability category (tied with London). Stockholm is first, followed by Sydney and Frankfurt.  We received a poor rating in air quality and carbon footprint, reflecting the challenges of a densely developed and highly trafficked city.

# 8 in Demographics and Livability, which measures viable housing options, commute times, climate, healthcare, and education. “Second cities” consistently outperform historically dominant “power” cities here. 

# 4 in Transportation and Infrastructure

# 3 in Ease of Doing Business 

#6 in Health, Safety and Security.

This all bodes well for our city that seems to have weathered the recession almost as boldly as it weathered 9/11!

IS MANHATTAN DIFFERENT?

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Nationally existing home sales dipped 0.6 percent month-over-month to an annual rate of 5.02 million units, the National Association of Realtors said on Tuesday. The drop last month was a touch less than market expectations for a fall to 5.0 million units. The data showed weakness at a crucial time for the housing market with the Federal Reserve due to wind up its program to buy mortgage-related securities. The program pushed home loan rates to record lows and helped the market slowly recover from a three-year slump.

Analysts were disturbed by the first rise in inventories in seven months and the jump in the months’ worth of supply to its highest level since August.

“It says to me not to expect significant price gains in the near term. We are looking at flat house prices this year on average, not every month, part of it is this overhang of supply,” said Craig Thomas, senior economist at PNC Financial Services in Pittsburgh.

U.S. stocks ignored the rise in inventories, surging on relief that the drop in sales was less than forecast. Both the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX jumped to 18-month closing highs.

Why is it that Manhattan is different? Is Manhattan a separate economy? We are experiencing multiple bids on many properties. Increased activity across the board. Is our little part of the world differnet? It appears so….

RETAIL UP 0.3%! A REFLECTION ON REAL ESTATE?

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Led by a big gain in electronics, U.S. retail sales increased 0.3% to a seasonally-adjusted $355.5 billion in February, despite three major snow storms in the East, the Commerce Department estimated Friday.

Sales have risen in four of the past five months, and were up 3.9% compared with a year earlier. Most categories of retailers recorded month-over-month increases in February, driving sales to their biggest percentage gain since November, the government said. Auto and truck sales were one exception, falling 2% compared with January. Sales at health- and personal-care stores dropped the most in six years. Excluding autos and trucks, retail sales increased 0.8% to $297.7 billion in February, the largest gain since November.

The storms had “no noticeable effect on retail sales,” wrote Brian Fabbri, an economist for BNP Paribas. Sales at non-store retailers, such as catalogs and online stores, were unchanged. “While we are not expecting the consumer to come roaring back in the near-term, improvements have been quicker than expected considering the still-distressed state of the labor market,” wrote Adam York, an economist for Wells Fargo Securities.

February sales were better than expected. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch were expecting February sales to be unchanged, and for sales excluding autos to rise 0.1%.

Retail reflects the real estate market in some way:  February was brutally cold and stormy, yet sales were brisk. We ponder what sales will produce when the weather warms up….and it is…..and we are seeing LOTS of activity in the luxury real estate market. March’s figures will be interesting indeed!